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not my place to be eating here. I’ll be keeping another dinner hot for the woman, just in case, but if she’s like her mother we may never hear.’

      And she left him to his roast beef.

      For a while the meal took his attention—a man who normally cooked for himself was never one to be ignoring good food—but when it was finished he was left staring down the shining surface of the ostentatious table, at the pouncing tigers on the epergne, at his future.

      What to do with this place?

      Sell it? Why not?

      The inheritance had come out of the blue. Selling it would mean he could buy the farms bordering his, and the country down south was richer than here. He was already successful but the input of this amount of money could make him one of the biggest primary producers in Ireland.

      The prospect should make him feel on top of the world. Instead, he sat at the great, grand dining table and felt...empty. Weird.

      He thought of Maeve and he wondered if this amount of money would have made a difference.

      It wouldn’t. He knew it now. His life had been one of loyalty—eldest son of impoverished farmers, loyal to his parents, to his siblings, to his farm. And to Maeve.

      He’d spent twelve months realising loyalty was no basis for marriage.

      He thought suddenly of the woman he’d pulled out of the bog. He hoped she’d be safe and dry by now. He had a sudden vision of her, bathed and warmed, ensconced in a cosy pub by a fire, maybe with a decent pie and a pint of Guinness.

      He’d like to be there, he thought. Inheritance or not, right now maybe he’d rather be with her than in a castle.

      Or not. What he’d inherited was a massive responsibility. It required...more loyalty?

      And loyalty was his principle skill, he thought ruefully. It was what he accepted, what he was good at, and this inheritance was enough to take a man’s breath away. Meanwhile the least he could do was tackle more of Mrs O’Reilly’s excellent roast beef, he decided, and he did.

      * * *

      If she had anywhere else to go, she wouldn’t be here. Here scared her half to death.

      Jo was cleaned up—sort of—but she was still wet and she was still cold.

      She was sitting on her bike outside the long driveway to Castle Glenconaill.

      The castle was beautiful.

      But this was no glistening white fairy tale, complete with turrets and spires, with pennants and heraldic banners fluttering in the wind. Instead, it seemed carved from the very land it was built on—grey-white stone, rising to maybe three storeys, but so gradually it gave the impression of a vast, long, low line of battlements emerging from the land. The castle was surrounded by farmland, but the now empty moat and the impressive battlements and the mountains looming behind said this castle was built to repel any invader.

      As it was repelling her. It was vast and wonderful. It was...scary.

      But she was cold. And wet. A group of stone cottages were clustered around the castle’s main gates but they all looked derelict, and it was miles back to the village. And she’d travelled half a world because she’d just inherited half of what lay before her.

      ‘This is my ancestral home,’ she muttered and shivered and thought, Who’d want a home like this?

      Who’d want a home? She wanted to turn and run.

      But she was cold and she was getting colder. The wind was biting. She’d be cold even if her leathers weren’t wet, she thought, but her leathers were wet and there was nowhere to stay in the village and, dammit, she had just inherited half this pile.

      ‘But if they don’t have a bath I’m leaving,’ she muttered.

      Where would she go?

      She didn’t know and she didn’t care. There was always somewhere. But the castle was here and all she had to do was march across the great ditch that had once been a moat, hammer on the doors and demand her rights. One hot bath.

      ‘Just do it,’ she told herself. ‘Do it before you lose your nerve entirely.’

      * * *

      The massive gong echoed off the great stone walls as if in warning that an entire Viking war fleet was heading for the castle. Finn was halfway through his second coffee and the sound was enough to scare a man into the middle of next week. Or at least spill his coffee. ‘What the...?’

      ‘It’s the doorbell, My Lord,’ Mrs O’Reilly said placidly, heading out to the grand hall. ‘It’ll be the woman. If she’s like her mother, heaven help us.’ She tugged off her apron, ran her fingers through her permed grey hair, took a quick peep into one of the over-mantel mirrors and then tugged at the doors.

      The oak doors swung open. And there was...

      Jo.

      She was still in her bike gear but she must have washed. There wasn’t a trace of mud on her, including her boots and trousers. Her face was scrubbed clean and she’d reapplied her make-up. Her kohl-rimmed eyes looked huge in her elfin face. Her cropped copper curls were combed and neat. She was smiling a wide smile, as if her welcome was assured.

      He checked her legs and saw a telltale drip of water fall to her boots.

      She was still sodden.

      That figured. How many bikers had spare leathers in their kitbags?

      She must be trying really hard not to shiver. He looked back at the bright smile and saw the effort she was making to keep it in place.

      ‘Good evening,’ she was saying. She hadn’t seen him yet. Mrs O’Reilly was at the door and he was well behind her. ‘I hope I’m expected? I’m Jo Conaill. I’m very sorry I’m late. I had a small incident on the road.’

      ‘You look just like your mother.’ The warmth had disappeared from the housekeeper’s voice as if it had never been. There was no disguising her disgust. The housekeeper was staring at Jo as if she was something the cat had just dragged in.

      The silence stretched on—an appalled silence. Jo’s smile faded to nothing. What the...?

      Do something.

      ‘Good evening to you too,’ he said. He stepped forward, edging the housekeeper aside. He smiled at Jo, summoning his most welcoming smile.

      And then there was even more silence.

      Jo stared from Mrs O’Reilly to Finn and then back again. She looked appalled.

      As well she might, Finn conceded. As welcomes went, this took some beating. She’d been greeted by a woman whose disdain was obvious, and by a man who’d seen her at her most vulnerable. Now she was looking appalled. He thought of her reaction when he’d lifted her, carried her. She’d seemed terrified and the look was still with her.

      He thought suddenly of a deer he’d found on his land some years back, a fawn caught in the ruins of a disused fence. Its mother had run on his approach but the fawn was trapped, its legs tangled in wire. It had taken time and patience to disentangle it without it hurting itself in its struggles.

      That was what this woman looked like, he thought. Caught and wanting to run, but trapped.

      She was so close to running.

      Say something. ‘We’ve met before.’ He reached out and took her hand. It was freezing. Wherever she’d gone to get cleaned up, it hadn’t been anywhere with a decent fire. ‘I’m so glad you’re...clean.’

      He smiled but she seemed past noticing.

      ‘You live here?’ she said with incredulity.

      ‘This is Lord Finn Conaill, Lord of Castle Glenconaill,’ the housekeeper snapped.

      Jo blinked and stared at Finn as if she was

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